68 CAN A PIANO KEEP SINGING IN THE RAIN? YES! IF IT'S A MASON & HAMLIN WITH THE EXCLUSIVE TENSION RESONATOR. Mason & Hamlin pianos laugh at changes in temperature and humidity that would distort the tone of an ordinary piano. The sounding board in every Mason & Hamlin holds a perf ct crown through the most extreme climatic fluctuations. An exclusIve patented device called the tension resonator makes the difference. Steel rods fastened to the frame are pre-set at the factory to the exact tension required for perfect, permanent crowning of the sounding board. It shouldn't surprise you that Mason & Hamlin is the only piano in the world with a tension resonator. What comes out of a piano is determined by what goes into it. And Mason & Hamlin puts more into a piano than anyone else. More time. More experience. More love. Æannn & Irtamlin '10 1I!t. < 'II; East Rochester, N.Y., A The Signature of Quality Pianos FOR CATALOG OF STYLES AVAILABLE WRITE DEPT. C . time he could have spent on his trek. This trek was a largely silent one, for he did not think that any Japanese would respond to a human voice. In his opinion, whatever stragglers there were would have to be surprised and seized, as he himself had been. As the search went on, there were flurries of excitement. On Septem- ber 29th, in a coastal cave overlooking the Air Force's bathing beach on the west side of the island, two Japanese knapsacks were discovered. The own- ers' names were in them. One of the men, the Repatriation Aid Bureau in Tokvo ascertained, had died in 1945, and -there were witnesses to his death; the other had been reported missing on Saipan, about a hundred miles to the north. The knapsacks contained, be- tween them, pretty much what one would expect a soldier or sailor to carry: an undershirt, a pair of dirty handkerchiefs, a wallet, a little money, an out-of-date season railroad ticket, a aood-luck charm, a toothbrush, a band- b . age, a cigarette case, a spoon, a pIece of camouflage cloth, and the stump ?f a candle. The candle was wrapped In a scrap of an English-language ccmic strip-I saw it but I couldn't iden- tify it from the fragment-in which one character was saying to another, "Don't be afraid, I've come to help you." The most interesting aspect of this find was that the knapsacks and their contents were in excellent con- dition, and dry. \\Tithout human at- tention, could they have stayed that way for twenty years? Minagawa thought not. Moreover, the knapsacks were free of ants, and that impressed Seraeant Cruz. He told me that if he doe n't check the linen closet in his house every two or three months, ants will devour his towels. "This in a ce- ment-block house!" he said. "\Vhat would you expect in an open cave?" Other bits of evidence-or what seemed evidence to those of the search- ers who were convinced of the existence of stragglers-kept turning up. In one cave, a searcher found an old Japanese sake bottle filled with comparatively fresh tuba, a mildly alcoholic drink made from the fermented sap of coco- nut trees. In another cave, in an area where there was no game and thus would logically be free of poachers, Minagawa one day discovered six palm fronds that had evidently been used, fairly recently, for bedding. Three days later, he revisited the cave, and now there were sixteen fronds. \Vhat was one to make of that? And how could one account for the strange experi- ence, not long afterward and not far " '. -c :Ø .' . o .. IT >w : . IT'S OUT' OF THIS WORLD .. .. . . . " AW ' CA ' ' M 'ea R I', ' , ...- , r ?:i!i7;- .. ITALY'S MOST VERSATILE . APE I IF: >.' : > : > !III;;;; Enjoy-Enjoy-Enjoy Campari 1-on the rocks, 2-with quinine water or the new bitter lemon, 3-with equol parts gin and sweet or dry vermouth. A golden recipe booklet is attoched to each bottle. Enjoy- 48 PROOF-IMPORTED, PREPARED AND BOTTLED BY AUSTIN, NICHOLS & CO"INC, NEW YORK, N. Y.